Page 8 - A Career in Civil Engineering
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engineer on the Fox River Bridge project in Illinois, which went on
              to win a National Recognition Award from the American Council
              of Engineering Companies in 2017. The project had unique tasks,
              such as scheduling construction around the spawning season of
              a federally protected species of fish. It also had more routine chal-
              lenges, such as coordinating with state transportation officials to
              make sure traffic disruptions were kept to a minimum (more than
              one hundred thousand vehicles cross the bridge daily). “Watching
              the project progress from the beginning stages of construction to
              the end is the best part of my job,” says Seymour. “I love seeing the
              transformation take place and know that I was a vital part of it.” 3


              Environmental Engineers

              Engineers who work on water and wastewater systems and land-
              fills are also civil engineers. Known as environmental engineers,
              their job is to help protect air, water, and land from becoming pol-
              luted by dirty industries, such as oil and gas production, or the
              processing of chemicals used to make detergents, paint, plastic,
              and countless other products. “In chemical processing, there’s
              a lot of wastewater to be treated and environmental engineers
              design systems that monitor them, evaluate performance and
              modify them for industrial wastewater processes,”  says Charles
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              Werth, a professor of environmental engineering at the University
              of Texas.
                 Environmental engineers are also brought in to help repair en-
              vironmental damage caused by pollution or by events such as oil
              spills. In the massive 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf
              of Mexico, 168 million gallons (636 million L) of oil poured into the
              gulf over eighty-seven days until the undersea well was capped.
              Environmental experts worried about the damage this would
              cause to wildlife, fishing and oyster farming, and local economies
              that depended on tourism. Environmental engineers tried several
              solutions to limit the damage. One strategy was to contain parts
              of the oil floating on the water’s surface with inflatable balloons or
              booms and then burn the oil. Another technique required environ-
              mental engineers to work with chemists and marine biologists to
              release chemicals called dispersants into the oil before it reached



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